112
112
Mar 1, 2013
03/13
by
KRCB
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
but the reason is new york city has a suicide rate with guns a tenth of the national average. that brings the whole thing down and the reason is it's very hard to get a gun. in new york city we have a very aggressive go after the kids carrying guns get them out of their hands. make sure they understand if they get caught with a gun they're going to get arrested. in fairness our state has reasonably great gun laws. when people say you can't make a diffence. just think about if you could rules the number of suicides. and there's no like the nra talks about a good guy going after a bad guy with guns. there's no bad guy in a suicide. there's a tragedy a family who lost the loved one, a life that's snuffed out. you can make a difference here. >> rose: sometimes i've heard police chiefs say that hand guns are bigger problem, that the ak47-'s of the dramatic instance where they do something obscene and awfu >> the day when there were 26 people killed with automatic weapons or semi automatic weapon in connecticut, they were on average 33 murders and 45 suicides with handguns throughou
but the reason is new york city has a suicide rate with guns a tenth of the national average. that brings the whole thing down and the reason is it's very hard to get a gun. in new york city we have a very aggressive go after the kids carrying guns get them out of their hands. make sure they understand if they get caught with a gun they're going to get arrested. in fairness our state has reasonably great gun laws. when people say you can't make a diffence. just think about if you could rules...
177
177
Mar 2, 2013
03/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 177
favorite 0
quote 0
the edge of the city, as in rome, but in the center of the city, and it was now a railroad station. he picked up the idea of the triple arches of the roman gate and made that the architectural motif of the terminal. >> one of the things i felt so striking when it was originally built inine 71, the "new york times" said this place was neither grand nor central. why did they build the terminal so far out of town. the vanderbilts in effect brought midtown to their doorstep, changed the whole center of gravity of manhattan. >> rose: you call it the great town square. >> i do. part of the idea-- you asked about the air rights -- this would be more than just a station. it would be more than a place where people were getting on and off the train. it was be an urban center, with hotels, apartment buildings, and shops called a city within a city, which it was, pouring through those passages and into the finally the main concourse, which became kind of a well, the great urban well, and the new york town square. not outdoors, indoors, this fantastic crossing place and gathering place. >> rose:
the edge of the city, as in rome, but in the center of the city, and it was now a railroad station. he picked up the idea of the triple arches of the roman gate and made that the architectural motif of the terminal. >> one of the things i felt so striking when it was originally built inine 71, the "new york times" said this place was neither grand nor central. why did they build the terminal so far out of town. the vanderbilts in effect brought midtown to their doorstep, changed...
73
73
Feb 28, 2013
02/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
to the place where he was born, new york city. right now the new york nicks are in second place in the eastern conference and caramel slow averaging 28 points per game. i am pleased to have him here at this table for the first time. welcome. >> thank you. >> rose: great to have you. >> thank you. >> rose: syracuse. tell me about that day. what did it mean for you? >> on that day, i had to take myself back to when i first decided that i wanted to go to syracuse and from that point on it was just so many memories that was rolling and rolling and rolling as i'm sitting here for when i got off the plane in the car around to the carrier dome sitting in my seat watching the game. up until that moment when they unveiled the jersey it was just so many memories of when i was at syracuse, when i was on campus in class, in my apartment just being a student. just being a teenager. >> rose: we know what you did for syracuse. you went all the way to the national championships, the n.c.a.a. national championship. what did syracuse dorr do for yo
to the place where he was born, new york city. right now the new york nicks are in second place in the eastern conference and caramel slow averaging 28 points per game. i am pleased to have him here at this table for the first time. welcome. >> thank you. >> rose: great to have you. >> thank you. >> rose: syracuse. tell me about that day. what did it mean for you? >> on that day, i had to take myself back to when i first decided that i wanted to go to syracuse and...
115
115
Feb 1, 2013
02/13
by
KRCB
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
>>. >> well, first of all, the the attack of 9/11 on this city and the pent begun and pennsylvania, was a defining event in many ways. and secondly,-- i, the critique i make of what has happened to our democratic system was one that i had already begun to really form. and i believe deeply in american democracy. i honor the profession of politics. i encourage young people to go into it. but i have found other ways to serve. i haven't turned my back on the political process. i am deeply concerned that the role of big money which i described earlier, has now degraded the operations of our democracy to a point that is causing deep concern to millions of us. it really has to be fixed. and i found that i ejoyed leading from an ngo position, advocating action on climate. i enjoy odd the business world. i've learned a tremendous amount in the business world. i didn't expect to enjoy it as much as i have. and so it's been a wonderful period for me, of growth and learning and i have continued to speak out and will continue to in the future. and this book is a part of that process. >> was it inevi
>>. >> well, first of all, the the attack of 9/11 on this city and the pent begun and pennsylvania, was a defining event in many ways. and secondly,-- i, the critique i make of what has happened to our democratic system was one that i had already begun to really form. and i believe deeply in american democracy. i honor the profession of politics. i encourage young people to go into it. but i have found other ways to serve. i haven't turned my back on the political process. i am...
43
43
May 22, 2013
05/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
they have the history of the city of moore. it starts in 1889 with the land rush and it's troubled along until 1950 and then there were a few thousand people there. and from 1960 on t population exploded. they have this wording on their own city web site about the exploding population. >> rose: why is that? >> oil and gas activity, the economy. and also many other parts of tornado alley and this part of the south that got hammered in 2011 had very sparse populations 40 or 50 years ago and zoom we're there and we have the people who've come there, the people who've developed and built houses just haven't built to the standards you would want in a zone where you have 250 miles an hour winds. >> rose: that would be the lesson learned, would it not? >> especially after 1999. but, you know, part of what i wrote today on dot earth was questions. you know, why -- especially schools. these two schools didn't have safe rooms or zones of safety when many other schools -- >> rose: what's a safe room? >> well, you can -- the texas tech is
they have the history of the city of moore. it starts in 1889 with the land rush and it's troubled along until 1950 and then there were a few thousand people there. and from 1960 on t population exploded. they have this wording on their own city web site about the exploding population. >> rose: why is that? >> oil and gas activity, the economy. and also many other parts of tornado alley and this part of the south that got hammered in 2011 had very sparse populations 40 or 50 years...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
31
31
Feb 20, 2013
02/13
by
WHUT
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
it was in chinese and it was placed by a reporter in the mainland who had gone to the city where he works. we needed him to confirm a couple things in order to make sure that we had the right guy. as dune pointed out he used some of the same infrastructure used for hacking. he registered a website for basically a mobile phone shop. he was making a little money on the side, and we needed him to confirm that that mobile phone shop was in fact his and that he has a relatively common last name and we needed to make sure he was the same guy who worked at the pla's cyber security institute which basically trains military operations in cyber wars. so the phone call was quite simple. we asked a couple of initial questions, are you the man who works at this university. he says yes. i'm not teaching classes today, i'm outside the city. do you own this mobile phone shop. he says yes. i no longer visit. that was some time ago. and then we begin to ask questions about the hacking activity and the other thing he does. and he quickly set the tone changes immediately he says that's not convenient to talk
it was in chinese and it was placed by a reporter in the mainland who had gone to the city where he works. we needed him to confirm a couple things in order to make sure that we had the right guy. as dune pointed out he used some of the same infrastructure used for hacking. he registered a website for basically a mobile phone shop. he was making a little money on the side, and we needed him to confirm that that mobile phone shop was in fact his and that he has a relatively common last name and...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
58
58
Jun 6, 2013
06/13
by
WHUT
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
i was born in the bronx. south bronx. yeah. you know, my mother, was on riverside drive, before that i believe it was the south view projects. but and she was born in la. so it is funny. >> rose: your wife. >> my wife was born in, will lao have us come together and create these three beautiful kids is a blessing. >> rose: let me take you back to jerry maguire. >> did you know what you had there when they wrapped? >> i knew when they said, you are going to be doing a read through, i mean, you doing the movie with tom cruise. >> rose: yeah. >> i knew what we had, because i knew -- i was a how long fan of tom before i ever worked with him before, a few good men. >> rose: a fan of what? his acting? >> his presence on stang. >> rose: so cruise, and they said jerry maguire, cruise, you want to be in it? >> no, it was you want to hear the story. i will shorten it down as best i can. my agent calls me and says there is a read this afternoon with robin williams, where you would play a football athlete, now i had just auditioned and miss
i was born in the bronx. south bronx. yeah. you know, my mother, was on riverside drive, before that i believe it was the south view projects. but and she was born in la. so it is funny. >> rose: your wife. >> my wife was born in, will lao have us come together and create these three beautiful kids is a blessing. >> rose: let me take you back to jerry maguire. >> did you know what you had there when they wrapped? >> i knew when they said, you are going to be doing...
72
72
Jun 20, 2013
06/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
sense not just of the big cities but the way the rest of china works, so that these students can be not leaders when they go back to their countries. an issue we're trying to address is that if china continues growing at three times the western world, even if it falls to two times, it's creating 10 million jobs a year, and the west is producing at the bottom of the cycle no jobs. that there's bound to be envy, unhappiness on the part of the west and large part because nobody ever blames themselves for their own failures. and that this can create a situation of hostility, from the west to china. then you get into a feedback loop from china to the best and you can end up with trade tensions, economic problems and military tensions. >> rose: one of the interesting thing is chinese leaders have been sending their kids to school including -- in harvard. one of the hopes they have and the world has is that they will come back with a view of the united states. that's different from what their parents might have had. >> i think that's right. the ratio, charlie is about eight to one. in othe
sense not just of the big cities but the way the rest of china works, so that these students can be not leaders when they go back to their countries. an issue we're trying to address is that if china continues growing at three times the western world, even if it falls to two times, it's creating 10 million jobs a year, and the west is producing at the bottom of the cycle no jobs. that there's bound to be envy, unhappiness on the part of the west and large part because nobody ever blames...
116
116
Mar 7, 2013
03/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
if you come and see the new york city ballet or the new york city philharmonictor metropolitan opera you are seeing among the very, very best of that art form that were can be produced in the world on any given night. it simply doesn't get any better. i'm fond of saying that lincoln center has a total of 30,000 seats in 22 auditorium. that's 12,000 more than madison square garden and we have better seasons. >> rose: (laughs) better singers, you said? >> better seasons. >> rose: you mean your performance style is better? >> exactly. >> rose: we hope that's changing by the way. but when you look at the physical plant there were you just horrified by it? did you say, my god, this is a -- this is a place that doesn't reflect the genius of the people who live here. >> rose: there was a consensus that lincoln center needed a modernization and a thor thorough one. >> rose: and a new look or just a -- >> it needed a respect for its past, its storied past, but some interventions that would open it up, that would fuse the city with lincoln center that would engage social conversations, social
if you come and see the new york city ballet or the new york city philharmonictor metropolitan opera you are seeing among the very, very best of that art form that were can be produced in the world on any given night. it simply doesn't get any better. i'm fond of saying that lincoln center has a total of 30,000 seats in 22 auditorium. that's 12,000 more than madison square garden and we have better seasons. >> rose: (laughs) better singers, you said? >> better seasons. >>...
105
105
Dec 17, 2013
12/13
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 105
favorite 0
quote 0
he is back on broadway playing the leads in two shakespeare plays. he is king richard in "richard the third" and olivia in "twelfth night." is provided a master class in shakespearean acting. i am pleased to have him at the table for the first time. welcome. >> thanks, charlie. >> what a nice tribute. how did this happen? these two plays coming here for you to show your stuff? >> how did it happen? it took a few years. the set and clothing designers and the musical director and the kind of core players, people that worked with me a lot when i was artistic director of the globe. when my time finished, i immediately set about wanting to suppose, carrying on the core workable we did which i hope was a rigorous attempt to explore what i call original playing up practices. what we know from shakespeare's day. it took a long time. we had to figure a way to mount two productions that would be popular enough. elizabethan spent their money on what they wore on their backs. >> what was your term in production? >> original playing practices. there should be not
he is back on broadway playing the leads in two shakespeare plays. he is king richard in "richard the third" and olivia in "twelfth night." is provided a master class in shakespearean acting. i am pleased to have him at the table for the first time. welcome. >> thanks, charlie. >> what a nice tribute. how did this happen? these two plays coming here for you to show your stuff? >> how did it happen? it took a few years. the set and clothing designers and the...
66
66
Sep 14, 2013
09/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: the syria story will soon take another turn, maybe as soon as this weekend. the report from the usmed chemical weapons inspector saturday expected to be released shortly. shortly. leon panetta has a better idea than most what the report might say. he was in congress, before that he was the chief of staff at the white house. he's had some of the most important jobs in government. and he has been through crisis when things were, as you might say, needing the most wisdom that you could find anywhere because the decisions were hard and consequential so i'm especially pleased to have him join me this evening. wk. >> nice to be here, charlie. >> rose: how is life outside of washington? do you miss it? >> first of all, there is life outside of washington. >> rose: you didn't doubt that. >> not at all. >> rose: a man from california would never doubt that. >> it's great to be back in carmel county, in the monterey peninsula, back with my wife and boys and grandchildren, and w im doing some speaki
sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: the syria story will soon take another turn, maybe as soon as this weekend. the report from the usmed chemical weapons inspector saturday expected to be released shortly. shortly. leon panetta has a better idea than most what the report might say. he was in congress, before that he was the chief of staff at the white house. he's had some of the most important jobs in government. and he has...
119
119
Jan 9, 2013
01/13
by
KRCB
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
bridge was destroyed after roman forces had evacuated across it to protect the city. d horatius stayed lae let his comrades leave and he develop in the river and came out. it's a great storage of courage. there's also some stanzas that says romans was for each other in those days rome was a team. and actually complains that it's not that way anymore. now we bicker among ourselves now we can't compromise. and he uses horahius as an example of wt we used to be and should be again. >> rose: in that mission you have to lever, it tears a hole in your heart and that expression's been used and you have acknowledged that this took something out of you to have to give up what you so believed is your mission and the mission of others who shared. >> right. >> rose: how do you deal with that question you must have asked yourself. >> yes. the first thing you don't feel sorry for yourself because when i go to bhesda and walter ed d saw young servicemen who lost limbs or have been badly burned i say wait a minute a little hole in my heart doesn't compare to a young person's life is
bridge was destroyed after roman forces had evacuated across it to protect the city. d horatius stayed lae let his comrades leave and he develop in the river and came out. it's a great storage of courage. there's also some stanzas that says romans was for each other in those days rome was a team. and actually complains that it's not that way anymore. now we bicker among ourselves now we can't compromise. and he uses horahius as an example of wt we used to be and should be again. >> rose:...
62
62
May 15, 2013
05/13
by
KRCB
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
he's one of the few to hold the title of university professor at harvard university. he's the chief at brigham and women's hospital in boston. his impact as a medical anthropologist spans the globe. he helped found partners in health to deliver health care in haiti in 1987. he was united stes deputy special voy for hait wh the earthquake of january 12, 2010 devastated the country. he serves as u.n. special advisor on community based medicine and lessons from haiti. his new book is called to repair the world. of speaks to the next ome of his most memorable speeches. speaking of speeches here is melinda gates giving the commencement at duke university on sunday where she spoke of him. >> i first met paul in 2003. i went to travel to his clinic in haiti. what struck me about that visit was, fir of all, it took us about... it took us so long to get the 100 yards from the vehicle to his clinic. and the reason for that was that paul introduced me to every single person along the way. every single person. and he introduced them by first and last name. he told me something ab
he's one of the few to hold the title of university professor at harvard university. he's the chief at brigham and women's hospital in boston. his impact as a medical anthropologist spans the globe. he helped found partners in health to deliver health care in haiti in 1987. he was united stes deputy special voy for hait wh the earthquake of january 12, 2010 devastated the country. he serves as u.n. special advisor on community based medicine and lessons from haiti. his new book is called to...
134
134
Oct 8, 2013
10/13
by
WETA
tv
eye 134
favorite 0
quote 0
new york city, this is charlie rose. >>> the president's refusal to negotiate is hurting our economy and putting our country at risk. this morning a senior white house official said that the presidt would rather default than to sit down and negotiate. really? >> rose: it is day 7 of the u.s. government shutdown. tensions are rising between democrats and republicans as both sides accuse the other of intransigence. president obama speaking today during a visit to fema headquarters called on john bayne tore end the shutdown. >> right now congress should do what is in the best interests of the economy, and the american people. and that's move beyond this manufactured crisis and work together to focus on growth, jobs, and providing the vital services that americans all across the country depend on. >> rose: markets today reacted it to the contingent shutdown with unease worried that the stalemate could prevent extension of the debt limit with dangerous consequences. to take a closer look at the economic fallout austan goolsbee joins us from chicago, a professor of economics from the booth
new york city, this is charlie rose. >>> the president's refusal to negotiate is hurting our economy and putting our country at risk. this morning a senior white house official said that the presidt would rather default than to sit down and negotiate. really? >> rose: it is day 7 of the u.s. government shutdown. tensions are rising between democrats and republicans as both sides accuse the other of intransigence. president obama speaking today during a visit to fema headquarters...